18:01 PM, 20th September 2023, About A year ago 49
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Landlords will be celebrating after the government announced it will scrap the energy performance certificate (EPC) targets for homes.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak unveiled the plan – along with a ban on binning gas boilers – during a televised press conference from Downing Street.
And tenants will be celebrating too since Mr Sunak acknowledged that the cost of carrying out EPC improvements to meet a minimum rating of C would impact the rent they pay.
He said that property owners would not now be forced to make expensive upgrades in just two years’ time and the cost of energy improvements could be around £8,000.
The prime minister said: “Those plans will be scrapped and while we will continue to subsidise energy efficiency, we will never force any household to do it.”
The chief executive of the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA), Ben Beadle, said: “The NRLA wants to see all properties as energy efficient as possible.
“However, the uncertainty surrounding energy efficiency policy has been hugely damaging to the supply of rented properties.
“Landlords are struggling to make investment decisions without a clear idea of the Government’s direction of travel.
He continued: “It is welcome that landlords will not be required to invest substantial sums of money during a cost-of-living crisis when many are themselves struggling financially.
“However, ministers need to use the space they are creating to develop a full plan that supports the rental market to make the energy efficiency improvements we all want to see.
“This must include appropriate financial support and reform of the tax system which currently fails to support investment in energy efficiency measures.”
However, the decision to bin EPC ratings for rented homes has been slammed by Dan Wilson Craw, the deputy chief executive of Generation Rent.
He said: “Cancelling higher standards for rented homes is a colossal error by the government.
“Leaving the impact on the climate to one side, it makes the cost-of-living crisis worse and damages renters’ health.
“One in four private renters lives in fuel poverty and, without targets for landlords to improve their properties, they face many more years of unaffordable bills.”
Mr Wilson Craw continued: “Energy efficiency is also an essential part of a home’s quality.
“Backtracking leaves the government’s levelling up mission to halve the number of non-decent rented homes in shreds.
“Both tenants and landlords need support to upgrade private rented homes, and the Prime Minister recognised that ‘big government grants’ help make it affordable.
“But without higher standards, landlords have no reason to accept tenants’ requests for improvements.”
He added: “The government’s dithering over these standards in recent years has led to the housing sector being unprepared for the original 2025 deadline.
“Ditching it completely is both cruel and out of proportion to what the Prime Minister wants to achieve.”
Landlords and homeowners will also have more time to make the transition to heat pumps, and households will only have to make the switch when they’re changing their boiler – and then not until 2035.
Mr Sunak says that gas boilers will not have to be ‘ripped out’ to meet targets and that heat pumps will need to be made cheaper, so they don’t impose high costs on families.
There will be an exemption will be introduced for some households and the boiler upgrade scheme will be increased by 50% to £7,500.
Mr Sunak also postponed the 2030 deadline for buying diesel- and petrol-powered cars and vans to 2035.
That moves the deadline to the EU deadline.
However, the government remains committed to a 2050 deadline for Net Zero but will be more pragmatic and transparent about how the steps will affect people.
He said: “The risk here to those of us who care about reaching net zero, as I do, is simple: if we continue down this path, we risk losing the consent of the British people.
‘And the resulting backlash would not just be against specific policies but against the wider mission itself meaning we might never achieve our goal.
“That’s why we have to do things differently.”
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Jay
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Sign Up21:00 PM, 20th September 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by PH at 20/09/2023 - 20:45
Always did, but can no longer trust them.
Crouchender
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Sign Up21:20 PM, 20th September 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by Jay at 20/09/2023 - 21:00
Everyone keeps forgetting this is a short term win BUT Labour will impose C targets anyway next year as they are trying to take the moral higher ground for 'saving' tenants energy use money.
Chuck Jaeger
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Sign Up21:49 PM, 20th September 2023, About A year ago
Common sense prevails but how much damage have the tories already done? How many landlords have already sold up? I held on and welcome this news but many didn't. And who's to say they won't u turn again? If labour get in it will only get worse for landlords.
I don't like any of them but this is a potential vote winner for the tories.
Ultimately though, as a landlord you can't trust any of them.
Cathie
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Sign Up21:58 PM, 20th September 2023, About A year ago
Three tenants in listed properties (with EPCs)/conservation area properties will have a slight reprieve. (SE, so v low yield). Once Labour get in it could/will all change and they will probably be homeless.
Whilst I applaud net zero, we are a tiny country and our efforts are pretty much negligible in the scheme of a climate crisis.
Dylan Morris
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Sign Up22:11 PM, 20th September 2023, About A year ago
Starmer will reintroduce it as soon as he gets in with a landslide majority.
LaLo
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Sign Up23:49 PM, 20th September 2023, About A year ago
Fantastic! If ‘C’ comes into force to help lower tenants energy bills, it is counter productive, as there wouldn’t be any tenants if there’s nothing available to rent!
Rebecca
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Sign Up6:44 AM, 21st September 2023, About A year ago
As a tenant, my heart leapt with joy reading this. I've had sleepless nights ever since the jobsworth epc assessor downgraded us from a high e to nearly an f.
I've been here 14 years, and yes the place needs improvement, but it's not that bad, and the rent isn't too high.
Im sure my landlord would have sold, and I couldn't have blamed him . I wouldn't be accepted anywhere else on my wage and I'd have been homeless on Queer Street.
Dylan Morris
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Sign Up9:37 AM, 21st September 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by Cathie at 20/09/2023 - 21:58Applaud net zero ? Don’t you know yet that it’s all a scam. Carbon dioxide is just 0.04% of the atmosphere and methane 0.0002%. Google it. They’re shutting down 3,000 farms in the Netherlands due to nitrogen emissions. Nitrogen is 78% of the atmosphere.
Easy rider
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Sign Up9:53 AM, 21st September 2023, About A year ago
I think it’s a case of throwing the baby out with the dishwater.
A reasonable option could have been to raise all properties, regardless of tenure type, to E.
Hopefully, by the time that was achieved, we’d have enough sustainably produced electricity and hydrogen to not need further EPC improvements. However, if further improvements were needed, raising properties to D could have been the next target.
Reluctant Landlord
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Sign Up10:20 AM, 21st September 2023, About A year ago
in working on the basis that IF starmer gets in the whole things will be reversed...but...that means he is effectively saying he doesnt care about rent increases as a result. Ergo I see him possibly stating a D is the goal, which as I understand it, is where most properties are already. So another 'vote winner' with no substance or actual change behind it.
Rishy was very clear yesterday when he said the effect of more costs to landlrods WILL mean rent increases to tenants, and this shoule be avoided.
Starmer has a lot to answer to if he then says thats ok and the Tories are going to hammer him home for an answer on this before the GE for sure.